The Yale AIDS Memorial Project is in
the process of documenting the epidemic’s impact on the Yale community. After a
year’s work, the project printed 1,000 copies of its first journal in May; the
publication comprises research, anecdotal profiles, and the photographs of
eight Yale alumni and scholars. The next phase will enhance the project’s
website presence, commemorating the lives of some of the estimated 450 Yale
students, alumni, professors, and staff lost to AIDS.
“A big part of my work involved the
study of collective memory, particularly surrounding the Holocaust, where you
had 20 years of silence and then an explosion of interest, a memory boom,” said
Christopher Glazek (class of 2007), the project creator and senior editor of
the magazine n+1.
“These people were here and they’re
not here anymore, and how we remember them is up to us,” said Richard Espinosa
(class of 2010), a graphic designer who is guiding the website phase. “What we
want to make is much larger than Yale: Our website will be a proof-of-concept
model that other colleges can use.”
The project’s board of advisers
includes Yale history Professor George Chauncey (class of 1977); and Mark
Schoofs (class of 1985), whose series on AIDS in Africa won a 2000 Pulitzer
Prize.
“This is a serious piece of work
devoted to real research that incorporates visual technology as well as verbal
recollection,” said Joseph W. Gordon, dean of undergraduate education at Yale
College.
Details and portions of the journal
can be seen on the website: www.yaleaidsmemorialproject.org.
The Friends of AIDS Foundation is
dedicated to enhancing the quality of life for HIV positive individuals and
empowering people to make healthy choices to prevent the spread of the HIV
virus. To learn more about The Friends of AIDS Foundation, please visit: http://www.friendsofaids.org.
TOGETHER WE REMAIN STRONG!